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From:
John McAvity <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
International Council of Museums Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 25 Aug 2004 11:27:03 -0300
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  Dear ICOM members,

  Attached is the preliminary program for INTERCOM in Seoul, Korea.    We hope you can attend our sessions. Register at the ICOM website, www.icom.museum
   
  INTERCOM

   

  ICOM=s International Committee on Management

   

   

  PRELIMINARY PROGRAM
  October 4, 5 & 6, 2004

  SEOUL, KOREA

   

  Unless otherwise noted, all sessions are at the COEX convention centre in Seoul.

   

   

  __________________________________________________________________________________

  Monday, October 4, 2004

   

   

  10:00 am              Welcome, Introductions

   

  Nancy Hushion, INTERCOM Chair

  John McAvity,  INTERCOM Program Chair

   

  11:00 am             Korean Museum Community and Strategic Issues

   

  An overview of the Korean museum community and strategic issues facing it.

   

                          Dr. Yang Ki, 

  National Folk Museum of Korea

  Seoul, Korea

   

  11:30-12:45pm               Establishing an International Museum of Living Culture

   

  With the opening of its landmark museum in Washington in September 2004, the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) completes its "establishment" as a museum complex of living cultures.   This panel of NMAI leaders presents the key elements and strategies of NMAI's development, in direct collaboration with Native people, including its mission and policies, planning and funding strategies, programs for preserving and advancing Native cultures of the western hemisphere, repatriation program and collections care practices, etc

   

   

  Speakers:            W. Richard West, Jr, Founding Director, NMAI

                          Douglas E. Evelyn, Deputy Director, NMAI

                          James A. Volkert, Associate Director for Mall Transition

                          Elizabeth Duggal, Director, External Affairs & Development.

   

   

   

   

  1pm-2:30pm                  lunch break  (on your own)

   

   

  2:30pm             LEGAL AND ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN THE 

  REPATRIATION OF STOLEN AND ILLEGALLY EXPORTED CULTURAL                               PROPERTY: IS THERE A MEANS TO SETTLE THE DISPUTES?

   

  (Joint session with ICME and ICOM Legal Affairs Committee)

   

   

  National and international efforts to preserve and protect the cultural                                      heritage of humanity continue, but the problem remains that, while all                                                 museum officials condemn the illicit trade in art and antiquities, some                                        persist in retaining within their collections illegally exported and stolen                                       cultural property. Questions of how international efforts can resolve                                      adequately the problems concerning the ownership of cultural objects                                     continue. 

   



  This program provides an engaging and informative discussion                                                         of the laws and ethical concepts relating to the return/restitution of                                              illegally exported and stolen cultural property. It will address the                                                       issue of whether such laws and ethical considerations mandate the                                          repatriation of all stolen and illegally exported cultural property. The                                         program provides a dialogue between speaker and participants of the best                                    form (and availability) of dispute resolution that can be initiated to resolve                                              most satisfactorily the difficult return/restitution questions.

   

  Moderator:                       Geoffrey Lewis, former ICOM President

   

  Keynote Speaker:              Marilyn Phelan,

  Robert H. Bean Professor of Law and Museum Science

  Texas Tech University School of Law, USA

   

  Respondents:                  Harrie Leyton 

  Senior Lecturer of Museology

  Reinwardt Academy

  Amsterdam, Netherlands

   

  W. Richard West, Jr

  Founding Director, 

  National Museum of the American Indian, 

  Washington, DC,USA

   

   

  4:30pm.                        Adjourn for the day

   

   

   

  _____________________________________________________________________________________

  TUESDAY,  October 5, 2004

   

   

  9:30am-10:15am                        Planning for Effective Management

   

  Preparation for development of a new museum or historic site poses

  challenges and opportunities for its planning team. This paper will examine

  some of the critical planning issues including: Determining the facility

  program and operating plan; Creation of an overall storyline and collections

  policy; Establishment of staffing criteria and an outline for the effective

  management of both paid staff and volunteers; Budgeting and fundraising for

  both capital and operating purposes; and Strategies for financial

  self-sufficiency. 

   

  Trudy Cowan, 

  Executive Director

  Lougheed House

  Calgary, Alberta, Canada

   

   

  10:15-11am             Museums and Cultural Industries: a myth in Taiwan!

   

  Since the concept of cultural industries was introduced to Taiwan, museums and quasi-museums in Taiwan have been seen as a economic engines for the economy. Local policy makers have come to expect that museums would be self-sufficient and generate spin offs for the local economy if properly managed.  This paper is to examine and investigate the myth that, under the present scope and structure, it is impossible for museums in Taiwan, as educational institutions, to reach such a goal. 

   

   

  June Chi-Jung Chu

  Department of Cultural Affairs

  Taipei City Government,

  Taipei, Taiwan

   



  11-11:30am              coffee break

   

   

  11:30 am-12:15pm Management Challenges for the 21th Century Museum

   

  A critical look at strategic challenges facing museums today by several directors.  Topics will including funding, commercialism, managing change (attitudes, skills, partnerships, project management), globalization, etc.

   

  David Fleming, Director, National Museums Liverpool, UK

  Joy Ice, Director, Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe,  USA

  Greg McManus, Director, Rotorua Museum of Art and History, New Zealand

   

   

   

  12:15-1pm         Preserving Intangible Cultural Heritage

   

  Problems of preserving intangible heritage and traditional national culture have been topical for museums.  Using examples of work in eastern Russia, Mr. Ruban will highlight examples of lessons learnt in preserving and exhibiting intangible heritage.                        

   

  Nicolai Ruban

  Director

  Grodakov Khabarovsk Regional Lore Museum

  Russia

   

  1pm - 2:30pm            lunch break (on your own)

   

   

  2:30pm- 3:15pm            THE MUSEUM AS WORKPLACE: STATUS OF THE PROFESSION IN THE                          UNITED STATES

   

  As museums assume their place in the market driven economy, there is a perception that the nature of museum work is changing. What new skills and core competencies are being developed to advance museum workers in the profession? What are museums doing now to plan for a diverse workforce

  of the future, and what methods are being used to attract, retain and improve the quality of the museum workplace? This session will discuss initiatives that are being used in US museums, including creative, cost-effective recruitment and retention methods; professional development training; motivation techniques; and the importance of succession planning, as well as issues related to compensation.

   

  Geri Thomas, President

  Thomas & Associates, Inc.

  New York, USA

   

   

  3:15-4pm  Total Leadership: A New Approach to Work/Life Balance

   

  By assessing the time spent in the four domains in our lives--Work, Home, Community, Self--Total Leadership looks at ways to increase business results while enriching our lives and the lives of our employees. Create change in the workplace and at home by examining results from two perspectives--as a business leader and for you personally.

   

  Jose Ortiz

  Manager of Administration

  The Cloisters

  Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

   

   

  4-4:30pm            coffee break

   

  4:30-5:30pm              BUSINESS MEETING for INTERCOM

   

  All members and prospective members are invited to attend and to hear reports on INTERCOM activities and to discuss future directions.   Chair, Nancy Hushion.



   

   

   

  ___________________________________________________________________________________

  WEDNESDAY, October 6, 2004

   

  9:30am- 1pm            THE QUEST FOR THE ETERNAL BLOCKBUSTER

  Impressionist Paintings of Egyptian Dinosaurs?

   

  (a joint session with INTERCOM and ICEE B International Committee on Exhibitions and Exchanges; ICAMPT - International Committee for Architecture and Museums Techniques; CIPEG B International Committee for Egyptology)

   

   

  At first glance, perhaps, intangible heritage and blockbuster exhibitions may appear to represent polar-opposite manifestations of the museum profession.   On closer examination, however, there is a synergy between the two.  Four collaborating ICOM committees will discuss the interplay between physical exhibitions and intangible heritage.  Strategic positions, conservation issues, and business challenges will be addressed as well as how blockbusters are developed, managed and toured, the impact they have on the staff and operations of the museums that organize and host them, on the museum community for which they have become a staple, and on the museum-going public that has come to expect them will round out the program.

   

  Speakers:                     Dr. Rita Freed, 

                                      Curator of Egyptian, Nubian and Near Eastern Art

                                      Museum of Fine Arts, 

                                      Boston, USA

   

                                      Brent Cooke,

                                      Director of Exhibitions

                                      Royal British Columbia Museum

                                      Victoria, Canada

   

                                      Han Meeter,

                                      Director

                                      Projecburo Meeter

                                      Leiden, Netherlands.

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

  Conclusion of INTERCOM program.

   

   

   

   

  For further information on the INTERCOM program, contact

   

   

  John G. McAvity

  Chair Programme Committee

  INTERCOM

  [log in to unmask]

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